Google Chrome has updated the existing "Enhanced protection" feature with AI to offer "real-time" protection against dangerous websites, downloads and extensions.
As spotted by Leo on X, the update has been rolled out to Chrome’s stable channel on all platforms after three months of testing in Canary.
Enhanced protection, which is part of the Safe browsing feature, isn't new and has been around for years, but it's now being updated to use AI.

Previously, Google said Chrome used "proactive protection" to protect users from malicious or suspicious websites, but the terminology has been updated to reflect AI integration.
It's unclear how the feature is different from the older 'non-AI' version, but Google could be using AI to understand the pattern in real-time and warn users about potentially harmful sites, even those that Google hasn’t previously identified.
According to Google, AI protection also performs an in-depth scan for suspicious downloads.
However, it warns that the browsing data is sent to Google when Enhanced protection is actively used.
Enhanced protection with AI is turned off by default, but you can turn it on from Settings > Security on Windows, Android and iOS.
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Comments
southerndoc - 1 month ago
Wonder how many false positives this generates... I'm still confused how much this slows down browsing.
obey_the_law - 1 month ago
I can imagine it wouldn't cause a slowdown because the data would be sent to Google's servers for computing, not the clients.
GT500 - 1 month ago
How much data is going to be collected from this feature to feed into AI model training?
deltasierra - 1 month ago
ALL of it, duh!
lol :P
b1k3rdude - 1 month ago
Hard pass, but then I have never used chrome...
deltasierra - 1 month ago
Geeze, at least Microsoft Edge's new AI-powered scareware blocker doesn't send user data to the cloud.
https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/microsoft/microsoft-edge-update-adds-ai-powered-scareware-blocker/
That said, two different scopes, but still interesting to see the different implementations.
I guess with this being an evolution of Enhanced Protected Mode, naturally, data is still being sent to Google.